Monster Watercolor Drawings and Paintings

Monster Watercolor Drawings and Paintings

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I knew I wanted to do a watercolor lesson with my first graders and typically I do a fish or a flower. Tired of those particular lessons, I wanted something new. While racking my brain, I glanced up at my bookshelf and noticed a worn copy of Where The Wild Things Are by Maurice Sendak.

Perfect! What little kid doesn’t like monsters?

I photocopied a few of the pages from the book and place them onto the tables. On the white board, I drew a few friendly monsters and waited for the giggles. There were many!

Now it was their turn.

SUPPLIES:

– Black crayon

– 9″ x 18″ watercolor paper

– Watercolor

Making the Monster:

Using a black crayon, the children drew one large monster onto a sheet of 9″ x 18″ watercolor paper. They added scales, swirls, dots, stripes and colored in a few sections.

Finally, the kids painted their monsters using watercolor paints. I used cake watercolors, but I really wish I used liquid. They are more vibrant and I think the kids would have liked the intense colors. Also, it’s hard for kids at this grade level to get the right amount of water mixed in with the paint.

Still, the paintings look wonderful!

Love this lesson on monsters? Click the yellow button below to download a free lesson PDF on how to draw monsters!

Hi Patty,I'm a new K-6 teacher in Australia. I love your site. It has provided me with so much inspiration. I used this lesson myself last week with a K/1/2 class. They had a lovely time creating their happy monsters. Thankyou for the inspiration 🙂

I have been doing a similar project with kindergarteners for years. The students love when I glue wiggly eyes to the paper and then they create their monsters around that. I have also had them use texture plates for the body and appendages which they think is quit magical:)

Dear Patty, You are such a great inspiration! I am in my 3rd wonderful year as an elementary art teacher after 25 years in graphic design. Your site has helped me tremendously!! I do something similar to this with my 1st graders. I read them the story and have them observe the details of the illustrations, then they create their own “wild things” in oil pastel and water color. They are fantastic, with a wide variety of features. (one eye, six arms, etc). The next week they cut out their creature, trace it. and stuff and staple them, and I tie a piece of yarn on them. They love their stuffed creatures! 🙂

Sorry, Patty, that was not directed at you. I replied under the wrong comment. My comment was in reference to the comment just above (that took me aback as it seemed very rude). The commenter called you out in a rude way for misspelling something, yet misspelled something themselves. I am not wanting to stir up trouble. I just cringe at some of the comments people leave on blogs sometimes. It’s not easy to put yourself out there and share when you sometimes have to face unwanted criticism. Thanks for what you do. And BTW, I make a lot of mistakes myself. Just hope we can all give each other a little grace (I noticed you responded very gracefully). Love the artwork by the way.

You really need to do a book Patty. Your ideas are so very art education based. Integrating reading and illustration is so fabulous. Stop giving your stuff away – it would be great in a book for first year teachers, particularly classroom elementary teachers. If I see another bulletin board with 30 “lions” all looking the same because all the problems were solved by the teacher (cut outs, color choices, etc) I will explode.

Hello!
I love these monsters that complement “Where the Wild Things Are”!
Is there a lesson plan that breaks down the steps for drawing these monsters? I have your other monster drawing guide (thank you!) but they are not quite the same.
Thanks Patti, love all your work!

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